A decade after the 2015 breach of the Office of Personnel Management exposed roughly 22 million records, identity theft protection services for affected federal workers and their families are beginning to expire, marking the end of a long-running federal response to one of the government’s most damaging cyber intrusions.
Those who signed up for the MyIDCare program OPM established 10 years ago are receiving emails on a rolling basis informing them their services will expire 10 years to the day of their enrollment. The notices began going out to enrollees late last year and will continue through September, the end of the current fiscal year.
“This is to notify you that the credit monitoring and identity theft insurance coverage you were provided by the Federal government has a 10-year term, which ends on [10 years after enrollment date],” reads an April email viewed by Government Executive from MyIDCare, the OPM-backed service that offered credit monitoring, dark web scanning, insurance and recovery services to those impacted in the breach. The emails are now being sent to breach victims who enrolled in the services.
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